Rossynant
Well-Known Member
Not reading what's above, but "ballast ratio" is often confused or used in advertising. Taken aside of boat configuration it has no meaning. 55% ratio boat capsized in 8B (one victim) and been on Colin Archer type rescue ship (THE most unturnable) - it has 0% ballast. None. 
For me high ballast ratio is indication of lightly constructed boat with no provision (in 'designed displacement') for stores and such. Simply a boat must have some weight to carry sail - stability is weight times RL - so lightly made boats nead more ballast. Light racer would be 40-50%, for cruiser of classic shape 20-30 is quite a lot.
Interesting thing - 'yacht producers' often say what ballast ratio or weight is, but to get stability characteristics from them requires legal investigation sometimes. In good auld times it was duty of a skipper to know them... www.maib.gov.uk/cms_resources/Ocean Madam.pdf
For me high ballast ratio is indication of lightly constructed boat with no provision (in 'designed displacement') for stores and such. Simply a boat must have some weight to carry sail - stability is weight times RL - so lightly made boats nead more ballast. Light racer would be 40-50%, for cruiser of classic shape 20-30 is quite a lot.
Interesting thing - 'yacht producers' often say what ballast ratio or weight is, but to get stability characteristics from them requires legal investigation sometimes. In good auld times it was duty of a skipper to know them... www.maib.gov.uk/cms_resources/Ocean Madam.pdf
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